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Jim Guttmann

From Carnegie Hall to smoky dives, from Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw to the legendary folk music venue Club Passim in Cambridge, Massachusetts, bassist Jim Guttmann has played everything from klezmer to classica--and most styles in between. In a remarkable career spanning more than 30 years, he’s performed with a myriad of groups including the Klezmer Conservatory Band, singers Eartha Kitt and Mark Murphy, the Really Eclectic String Quartet, blues masters Johnny Shines and James Cotton, the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra, Texas swing legend Tiny Moore, new acoustic music guitar virtuoso Russ Barenberg, the Artie Shaw Orchestra, and many more. Whether he’s swinging a jazz tune, holding down the clave rhythm in an Afro-Cuban song, or nailing a lively sirba with a klezmer band, Guttmann plays with great warmth, sophistication, and flawless time.

A native New Yorker, Guttmann played electric bass in rock bands while studying psychology at Adelphi University. After moving to Boston in 1970 to earn a Master’s degree in Mass Communications from Emerson College, he switched to string bass and entered the busy Boston-area blues, jazz, bluegrass, and new acoustic music scene. The recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts grant to study the arco solo tradition in jazz bass playing, Guttmann has studied performance with Boston Symphony Orchestra principle bassist Edwin Barker and jazz bassist Dave Holland, harmony with Richard Cornell, and techniques for improvisation with Charlie Banacos.

As a member of eclectic bluegrass quartet Cheap Trills from 1975 to 1979, he worked with like-minded string players whose performances included everything from Charlie Parker’s “Yardbird Suite” and Mongo Santamaria’s “Afro Blue” to traditional Appalachian tunes and Texas waltzes. He was a regular on the jazz scene, as well, sitting in with the Boston edition of Jaki Byard’s Apollo Stompers on many occasions. He also performed regularly with the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra until the mid-1980s.

In 1980, New England Conservatory’s Hankus Netsky asked Guttmann to join a new group he was organizing, the Klezmer Conservatory Band (KCB). The KCB was almost single-handedly responsible for launching the modern klezmer music revival. Guttmann has remained with the group ever since, appearing on all ten of their recordings; touring Europe, Australia, and America; and performing and recording with Joel Grey and Itzhak Perlman. He also performs in klezmer ensembles with Andy Statman and Frank London, and in Alicia Svigals’ Klezmer Fiddle Express. In addition, he is a member of the Grammy-winning ensemble featured on Yehudi Wyner’s “The Mirror,” a klezmer influenced chamber work released on the Naxos label.

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204
Album Review

Jim Guttmann: Bessarabian Breakdown

Read "Bessarabian Breakdown" reviewed by Raul d'Gama Rose


Surely Bessarabian Breakdown is a contender for one of 2010's most interesting albums . It has been a year for a sort of mini-revival of roots music, and klezmer has received wide attention--as much as the blues and other folk music. Against that backdrop, Jim Guttmann's Bessarabian Breakdown must be well received. It is a sleek production that sings passionately of a music that arguably originated among the Levites in Biblical times. However, the repertoire that has been handed down ...

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192

Recording

Klezmer Conservatory Bassist Jim Guttmann Ranges from Klezmer to Clave on His Debut Release as a Leader

Klezmer Conservatory Bassist Jim Guttmann Ranges from Klezmer to Clave on His Debut Release as a Leader

Source: Braithwaite & Katz Communications

Jim Guttmann takes on the Jewish and Klezmer repertory with abundant humor, passion, and a refreshing dose of over-the-top rowdiness." --Dr. Hankus Netsky, Founder and Artistic Director, Klezmer Conservatory Band Bessarabian Breakdown (Kleztone Records) has been a long time coming. For more than 30 years, bassist Jim Guttmann, best known as the anchor man in the Klezmer Conservatory Band, has played everything from klezmer to jazz to bluegrass to classical, but always in the bands of other people. Now he ...

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